The Planetary Week in the First Century B. C
CHAPTER 6 The Planetary Week in the First Century B. C. HERE has not yet appeared any evidence to indicate that the pagan week of days named after the seven planetary deities was in use among the Romans during the period of the Republic. The testimony of both the classical writers and the archaeological discoveries points to the first century before Christ as the time when it was adopted by the Roman people. Not a few1 are the scholars who think that it came to Rome about the time when Julius Caesar was Pontifex Maximus (68-44 B. C.) 1 Here is a partial list of authorities who hold that the astrological or planetary week was introduced into Rome during the first century B. C., or about the beginning of the Christian Era: J. Hastings, Encyclopaedia of Religion and Ethics, Vol. 3, p. 63, art. “Calendar” (Introductory, sec. 8); E. W. Maunder in The International Standard Bible Encyclopaedia, Vol. I, p. 299, art. “Astrology”; The New International Encyclopaedia, Vol. 23 p. 436, art. “Week”; Harper’s Dictionary of Classical Literature and Antiquities, p. 1669, art. “Week”; Larousse du XXe Siècle (1933), Vol. 6, p. 287, col. 1, art. “Semaine”; 3. de Witte in the Gazette Archéologique (1877), Vols. 2, 3 (Paris); The Catholic Encyclopedia, Vol. 5, p. 109, art. “Dominical Letter”; The World Book Encyclopedia, Vol. 18, p. 7700, art. “Week”; F. G. Moore, The Roman’s World, p. 282. Caesar’s Other Calendar It was in the first century before Christ that Rome began to play a big military role in the affairs of Egypt and Asia.
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